Lenovo PC 300PL Technical Information Manual for IBM PC300GL (Type 6563, 6564, - Page 9
CD-RW, DVD-ROM, SoundBlaster, Adlib, and Microsoft® Windows® Sound System applications
View all Lenovo PC 300PL manuals
Add to My Manuals
Save this manual to your list of manuals |
Page 9 highlights
CD-RW - Diskette write-protection™ - Alert on LAN • Accelerated graphics port (AGP) video adapter with up to 16 MB of Synchronous Graphics Random Access Memory (SGRAM) • Integrated 16-bit audio controller and built-in high-quality speaker (supports SoundBlaster, Adlib, and Microsoft® Windows® Sound System applications) • Networking - IBM 10/100 megabits-per-second (Mbps) PCI Ethernet adapter with Wake on LAN in some models - IBM PCI token-ring adapter with Wake on LAN support (optional) • Expansion: four drive bays, three PCI expansion slots • PCI I/O bus compatibility • EnergyStar compliance (some models only) • 3.5-inch, 1.44 MB diskette drive • Input/Output features - One 25-pin, ECP/EPP parallel port - Two 9-pin, 16550 universal asynchronous receiver/transmitter (UART) serial ports - Two 4-pin, Universal Serial Bus (USB) ports - One 6-pin, keyboard port - One 6-pin, mouse port - One 15-pin, DDC2B-compliant monitor port or - One 24-pin, DVI-I port on the AGP adapter (on some models) - Three 3.5-mm audio jacks (in/headphone out, line in, microphone) DVD-ROM CD-Rewritable (CD-RW) drives, standard on some models, enable the recording and reuse of CD recordable media. The laser used in CD-RW has variable temperatures to provide the three functions of CD-RW drives: playing CDs or CD-RWs, erasing CD-RWs, and recording CD-RWs. CD-RW drives can read traditional CDs, but many older CD players cannot read CD-RWs. Their light reflective properties are about one-third that of traditional CDs. CD-RW drives cannot read DVDs. To learn more about CD-RW drives, see the Understanding Your Personal Computer publication for your personal computer model and type number. This publication is available on the World Wide Web at http://www.ibm.com/pc/support. DVD-ROM drives, standard on some models, differ from CD-ROM and CD-RW drives as the result of refinements in laser technology. The recording tracks on DVD media are not as deep and are more condensed than on CDs or CD-RWs, therefore DVDs provide more storage space. DVD media also use both sides of the disk, as opposed to just one side for CDs and CD-RWs. DVD-ROM drives read traditional CDs, CD-RWs, and DVDs. To learn more about DVD-ROM drives, see the Understanding Your Personal Computer publication for your personal computer model and type number. This publication is available on the World Wide Web at http://www.ibm.com/pc/support. 2 PC 300 GL and 300 PL